Two Asian Style Pin-ups by Bill Randall
Sep 5th, 2017 by Aldouspi

Bill Randall was an illustrator and magazine cover artist during the 1950’s and 1960’s. Here is a example of his beautiful female pin-up work
displaying an Asian or Japanese flair.

IF you would like to own some of Bill Randall’s artwork, check out the items for sale and find some news on Japanese pin-up below.


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    Bill Randall Art For Sale

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Video on Bill Randall’s art

California vs. Nevada Randall Pinup Prints and CalNeva history

News About Japanese Pin-up

The Snowman and the Pin-up by Bill Randall
Jan 13th, 2016 by Aldouspi

This nude pin-up looks awfully warm for standing next to that snowman. January/winter Pin-up Calendar Art by Bill Randall.

PinUp: BILL RANDALL)

Pin Up Arhiv


Books About Winter Art

    TITLE: By Julie M Covert Art of Winter (1st First Edition) [Hardcover]

    Celebrating the beauty that winter creates with ice and snow, “Art of Winter” by Julie M Covert is a pictorial essay of winter’s fierce and fragile beauty on Lake Huron. It is a feast for the eyes for anyone who loves the Great Lakes, winter and the beauty of nature. Surprising plays of light and sculptures of ice are the reward for braving bone-chilling temperatures. It captures ice and water doing battle; the stunning pink of sunrise as seen through the prisms of countless ice shards; and the wildlife of Lake Huron as they hunt and play. These images captivate the senses and may even create a longing for those frosty mornings, when snow crunches underfoot and one’s breath can be seen.–
    Source …


    TITLE: Impressionists in Winter: Effets de Neige


    Impressionsts in Winter: Effets de Neige presents the first thorough investigation of the subject of Impressionist winter landscape. The subject of winter – clearly the most inhospitable season for plein-air painting – provides some of the most exceptional and most spellbindingly beautiful paintings in Impressionism. No exhibition and no publications in the literature on Impressionism have been devoted to this theme before. While such a thematic approach might seem at first blush a superficial one, the subject of this exhibition goes to the heart of one of the central issues of Impressionism, a dedication to painting specific effects of weather and light that is unprecedented in the history of art. Inspired by Alfred Sisley’s Snow at Louveciennes in The Phillips Collection, this exhibition of sixty-three works presents an opportunity to consider the subject of snow in Impressionist painting in an unprecedented way. While anyone might have come across one or two of these exceptional works in various works in this country or abroad, it comes as a surprise to most to learn that the Impressionists painted hundreds of paintings of snow or effets de neige, as they came to be called.

    Of all the Impressionists, three artists especially were drawn to paint effets de neige: Claude Monet, Alfred Sisley, and Camille Pissarro. Their shared fascination with these ‘effets’ led all three to repeatedly seek out opportunities to paint landscapes in snow. Yet each brought to the subject a highly individual response that we find reflected in the paintings assembled here. In addition to these three artists, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Gustave Caillebotte and Paul Gauguin also painted snowscapes, though far fewer. Renoir’s characteristic interest in a social gathering of skaters in the Bois de Boulogne, Caillebotte’s dramatic elevated views over Paris, and Gauguin’s rare Brittany snowscapes add dimension and contrast to the dedicated pursuit of winter landscape just outside Paris of Monet, Sisley, and Pisarro. The result is a wider range of winter scenes from the bucolic French countryside to ice floes on the Seine, from the paths and roads of small villages to the boulevards and rooftops of Paris. Their common ground is an obsession with winter light. Most of us do not think of Paris-or the surrounding countryside-covered in snow. We do not anticipate a blizzard impeding winter travel to this part of of the world nor have we ever seen the Seine frozen solid.

    A very different weather pattern prevailed during the late 19th century. Snowfalls, blizzards, and frost were a fairly common winter occurrence. Two of the most severe periods of extended cold since 1840 occurred during the winters of 1879-80 and 1890-91. In order to provide a backdrop of recorded weather conditions of the period, we brought together documentation from numerous sources to describe precisely the winter weather during the years covered by this exhibition . The weather was at times described as ‘wolf-like’ or ‘Siberian,’ and once was compared to the North Pole. These vivid accounts not only have helped us to assign dates to certain undated works, but also have provided a context for appreciating the impact of weather conditions on life in France in the late nineteenth century.
    Source…


    Bill Randall and Winter Art Related Items For Sale

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1/6 Tales of Winter - The Art of Snow and Ice

News About Winter Art


Click here for another post
featuring a Snowman with Girl Pin-up

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